Loading
  • 0Shopping Cart
African Water Association Knowledge Mgmt
  • Home
  • About
    • Introduction
    • Our partners
  • Our Projects
  • Publications
  • Média
    • Videos
    • Maps
  • Bookcase
  • Contact-us
  • en
    • fr
  • Menu Menu

Recent Posts

  • The Abidjan Declaration, a Key Outcome of the 21st AfWASA Congress/FSM7 Conference
  • The Yaounde Statement: AfWA Makes Recommendations for Non-Revenue Water (NRW) Management
  • Share Water No. 13
  • Zoom : des équipements pour l’approvisionnement en eau et le traitement des eaux usées
  • A Non-Intrusive Technology for Network Performance Control

Categories

  • Autonomous – sanitation (3)
  • collective-sanitation (4)
  • news (31)
  • policy-and-regulation-of-the-sanitation-sector (7)
  • sanitation (15)
  • sludge-management (3)
  • Unbilled water (2)
  • urban and peri urban sanitation (1)
  • water (14)
  • access to potable water (4)
  • blog (18)
  • Eaux usées (3)
  • events (3)
  • front page blog (21)
  • OGSWC (1)
  • Projects / Programs Products (1)
  • Publications and Digital Collection (5)
  • SSD (2)
  • Technologies de gestion de l'eau (4)
  • tenders (2)
  • Uncategorized (13)
  • WA-WASH (1)
  • water policy and regulations (1)
  • Water projects (5)
  • Water Quality (2)
  • Water resources management (3)
  • zare's (2)

Scaling up Faecal Sludge Management in Kenya’s Urban Areas

Scaling up Faecal Sludge Management in Kenya’s Urban Areas

As in many countries across the developing world, in Kenya on-site sanitation systems predominate in towns. In most cases, faecal sludge from on-site systems is emptied and directly discharged into natural channels, or transported and disposed of untreated into the environment. In 2011, the Government of Kenya, through the Water Sector Trust Fund, commissioned a sanitation up-scaling concept called Up-scaling Basic Sanitation for the Urban Poor (UBSUP), which took into consideration the entire sanitation service chain. Key components of this concept include infrastructure, equipment, and services across the sanitation service chain. Implementation of the model is based on three key pillars: technology, social marketing and business and financing. These faecal sludge management (FSM) solutions are effective, practical, affordable, and do not require significant changes to the toilets which people currently use. From the start of the programme, seven decentralised treatment facilities (DTFs) with the capacity to serve 70,000 people have been constructed in seven towns in Kenya. The programme has also streamlined emptying services by integrating relevant laws into framing a concept for the emptiers. The goal of the programme is to provide a replicable urban sanitation service provision model that can be implemented nationally as a medium-term response to the FSM challenges in Kenya’s towns.

Categories: ,
  • Description

Description

Scaling up Faecal Sludge Management in Kenya’s Urban Areas

Related products

  • Faecal Sludge & Septage Management

    Read more Show Details
  • DIRECTIVES OMS POUR L’UTILISATION SANS RISQUE DES EAUX USÉES, DES EXCRETA ET DES EAUX MÉNAGÈRES: Volume II Utilisation des eaux usées en agriculture

    Read more Show Details
  • Reuse of treated sewage in Delhi city: Microbial evaluation of STPs and reuse options

    Read more Show Details
  • The impact of sanitation on infectious A disease and nutritional status: systematic review and meta-analysis

    Read more Show Details

PARTNER

Contact-us

Abidjan – Ivory Coast Cocody Riviera Palmeraie

Tél. : (+225) 27 22 49 96 11 / 27 22 49 96 13 – Email : contact@afwa-hq.org

Category

usefull links

  • Our Partners
  • Our Projects
  • WA-WASH Program
  • AFRICAP
  • en
    • fr

RECHERCHE

Four billion people facing severe water scarcity FSM4 Abstracts of presentations given within Track 3: Industry
Scroll to top